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Whiskey Rebellion

The Whiskey Rebellion (also known as the Whiskey Insurrection) was a violent tax protest in the United States beginning in 1791 and ending in 1794 during the presidency of George Washington. The so-called "whiskey tax" was the first tax imposed on a domestic product by the newly formed federal government. Beer was difficult to transport and spoiled more easily than rum and whiskey. Rum distillation in the United States had been disrupted during the American Revolutionary War, and whiskey distribution and consumption increased afterwards (aggregate production had not surpassed rum by 1791). The "whiskey tax" became law in 1791, and was intended to generate revenue for the war debt incurred during the Revolutionary War. The tax applied to all distilled spirits, but consumption of American whiskey was rapidly expanding in the late 18th century, so the excise became widely known as a "whiskey tax".[3] Farmers of the western frontier were accustomed to distilling their surplus rye, barley, wheat, corn, or fermented grain mixtures to make whiskey. These farmers resisted the tax. In these regions, whiskey often served as a medium of exchange. Many of the resisters were war veterans who believed that they were fighting for the principles of the American Revolution, in particular against taxation without local representation, while the federal government maintained that the taxes were the legal expression of Congressional taxation powers.

Whiskey Rebellion

George Washington reviews the troops near Fort Cumberland, Maryland, before their march to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion in western Pennsylvania.
Date1791–1794
Location
Result Government victory
Belligerents
Frontier tax protesters United States government
Commanders and leaders
James McFarlane   George Washington
Alexander Hamilton
Henry Lee III
Thomas Sim Lee
Units involved
Rebels

Regular army
US Marshals Service

State militia from:
Strength
600 Pennsylvania rebels 13,000 Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania militia
10 regular army troops
Casualties and losses
3–4 killed
170 captured[1]
None; About 12 died from illness or in accidents[2]
2 civilian casualties

Throughout Western Pennsylvania counties, protesters used violence and intimidation to prevent federal officials from collecting the tax. Resistance came to a climax in July 1794, when a US marshal arrived in western Pennsylvania to serve writs to distillers who had not paid the excise. The alarm was raised, and more than 500 armed men attacked the fortified home of tax inspector John Neville. Washington responded by sending peace commissioners to western Pennsylvania to negotiate with the rebels, while at the same time calling on governors to send a militia force to enforce the tax. Washington himself rode at the head of an army to suppress the insurgency, with 13,000 militiamen provided by the governors of Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The rebels all went home before the arrival of the army, and there was no confrontation. About 20 men were arrested, but all were later acquitted or pardoned. Most distillers in nearby Kentucky were found to be all but impossible to tax—in the next six years, over 175 distillers from Kentucky were convicted of violating the tax law.[4] Numerous examples of resistance are recorded in court documents and newspaper accounts.[5]

The Whiskey Rebellion demonstrated that the new national government had the will and ability to suppress violent resistance to its laws, though the whiskey excise remained difficult to collect. The events contributed to the formation of political parties in the United States, a process already under way. The whiskey tax was repealed in the early 1800s during the Jefferson administration. Historian Carol Berkin argues that the episode, in the long run, strengthened US nationalism because the people appreciated how well Washington handled the rebels without resorting to tyranny.[6]

Whiskey tax

 
Alexander Hamilton in a 1792 portrait by John Trumbull

A new U.S. federal government began operating in 1789, following the ratification of the United States Constitution. The previous central government under the Articles of Confederation had been unable to levy taxes; it had borrowed money to meet expenses and fund the Revolutionary War, accumulating $54 million in debt. The state governments had amassed an additional $25 million in debt.[7] Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton sought to use this debt to create a financial system that would promote American prosperity and national unity. In his Report on Public Credit, he urged Congress to consolidate the state and national debts into a single debt that would be funded by the federal government. Congress approved these measures in June and July 1790.[8]

A source of government revenue was needed to pay the respectable amount due to the previous bondholders to whom the debt was owed. By December 1790, Hamilton believed that import duties, which were the government's primary source of revenue, had been raised as high as feasible.[9] He therefore promoted passage of an excise tax on domestically produced distilled spirits. This was to be the first tax levied by the national government on a domestic product.[10] The transportation costs per gallon were higher for farmers removed from eastern urban centers, so the per-gallon profit was reduced disproportionately by the per-gallon tax on distillation of domestic alcohol such as whiskey. The excise became known as the "whiskey tax." Taxes were politically unpopular, and Hamilton believed that the whiskey excise was a luxury tax and would be the least objectionable tax that the government could levy.[11] In this, he had the support of some social reformers, who hoped that a "sin tax" would raise public awareness about the harmful effects of alcohol.[12] The whiskey excise act, sometimes known as the "Whiskey Act", became law in March 1791.[13][14] George Washington defined the revenue districts, appointed the revenue supervisors and inspectors, and set their pay in November 1791.[15]

Western grievances

The population of Western Pennsylvania was 17,000 in 1790.[16] Among the farmers in the region, the whiskey excise was immediately controversial, with many people on the frontier arguing that it unfairly targeted westerners.[17] Whiskey was a popular drink, and farmers often supplemented their incomes by operating small stills.[18] Farmers living west of the Appalachian Mountains distilled their excess grain into whiskey, which was easier and more profitable to transport over the mountains than the more cumbersome grain. A whiskey tax would make western farmers less competitive with eastern grain producers.[19] Additionally, cash, which at this time consisted of specie (gold and silver coins), was always in short supply on the frontier, nevertheless the law explicitly stipulated the tax could only be paid in specie. In lieu of specie, whiskey often served as a medium of exchange, which for poorer people who were paid in whiskey meant the excise was essentially an income tax that wealthier easterners did not have to pay.[20]

Small-scale farmers also protested that Hamilton's excise effectively gave unfair tax breaks to large distillers, most of whom were based in the east. There were two methods of paying the whiskey excise: paying a flat fee (per still) or paying by the gallon. Large distillery produced whiskey in volume and could afford the flat fee. The more efficient they became, the less tax per gallon they would pay (as low as 6 cents, according to Hamilton). Western farmers who owned small stills did not typically have either enough time nor enough surplus grain to operate them year-round at full capacity, so they ended up paying a higher tax per gallon (9 cents), which made them less competitive.[21] The regressive nature of the tax was further compounded by an additional factor: whiskey sold for considerably less on the cash-poor Western frontier than in the wealthier and more populous East. This meant that, even if all distillers had been required to pay the same amount of tax per gallon, the small-scale frontier distillers would still have to remit a considerably larger proportion of their product's value than larger Eastern distillers. Less-educated farmers, who in this era were often illiterate, also feared they would be cheated by corrupt tax collectors. Small-scale distillers believed that Hamilton deliberately designed the tax to ruin them and promote big business, a view endorsed by some historians.[22] However, historian Thomas Slaughter argued that a "conspiracy of this sort is difficult to document".[23] Whether by design or not, large distillers recognized the advantage that the excise gave them and they supported it.[24]

Other aspects of the excise law also caused concern. The law required all stills to be registered, and those cited for failure to pay the tax had to appear in distant Federal, rather than local courts. The only Federal courthouse was in Philadelphia, some 300 miles away from the small frontier settlement of Pittsburgh. From the beginning, the Federal government had little success in collecting the whiskey tax along the frontier. Many small western distillers simply refused to pay the tax. Federal revenue officers and local residents who assisted them bore the brunt of the protesters' ire. Tax rebels harassed several whiskey tax collectors and threatened or beat those who offered them office space or housing. As a result, many western counties never had a resident Federal tax official.[25]

In addition to the whiskey tax, westerners had a number of other grievances with the national government, chief among which was the perception that the government was not adequately protecting the residents living in the western frontier.[25] The Northwest Indian War was going badly for the United States, with major losses in 1791. Furthermore, westerners were prohibited by Spain (which then owned Louisiana) from using the Mississippi River for commercial navigation. Until these issues were addressed, westerners felt that the government was ignoring their security and economic welfare. Adding the whiskey excise to these existing grievances only increased tensions on the frontier.[26]

Resistance

Many residents of the western frontier petitioned against passage of the whiskey excise. When that failed, some western Pennsylvanians organized extralegal conventions to advocate repeal of the law.[27] Opposition to the tax was particularly prevalent in four southwestern counties: Allegheny, Fayette, Washington, and Westmoreland.[28] A preliminary meeting held on July 27, 1791, at Redstone Old Fort in Fayette County called for the selection of delegates to a more formal assembly, which convened in Pittsburgh in early September 1791. The Pittsburgh convention was dominated by moderates such as Hugh Henry Brackenridge, who hoped to prevent the outbreak of violence.[29] The convention sent a petition for redress of grievances to the Pennsylvania Assembly and the U.S. House of Representatives, both located in Philadelphia.[30] As a result of this and other petitions, the excise law was modified in May 1792. Changes included a 1-cent reduction in the tax that was advocated by William Findley, a congressman from western Pennsylvania, but the new excise law was still unsatisfactory to many westerners.[31]

 
"Famous Whiskey Insurrection in Pennsylvania", an 1880 illustration of a tarred and feathered tax collector being made to ride the rail

Appeals to nonviolent resistance were unsuccessful. On September 11, 1791, a recently appointed tax collector named Robert Johnson was tarred and feathered by a disguised gang in Washington County.[32] A man sent by officials to serve court warrants to Johnson's attackers was whipped, tarred, and feathered.[33] Because of these and other violent attacks, the tax went uncollected in 1791 and early 1792.[34] The attackers modeled their actions on the protests of the American Revolution. Supporters of the excise argued that there was a difference between taxation without representation in colonial America, and a tax laid by the elected representatives of the American people.[35]

Older accounts of the Whiskey Rebellion portrayed it as being confined to western Pennsylvania, yet there was opposition to the whiskey tax in the western counties of every other state in Appalachia (Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia).[36] The whiskey tax went uncollected throughout the frontier state of Kentucky, where no one could be convinced to enforce the law or prosecute evaders.[37][38] In 1792, Hamilton advocated military action to suppress violent resistance in western North Carolina, but Attorney General Edmund Randolph argued that there was insufficient evidence to legally justify such a reaction.[39]

In August 1792, a second convention was held in Pittsburgh to discuss resistance to the whiskey tax. This meeting was more radical than the first convention; moderates such as Brackenridge and Findley were not in attendance. Future Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin was one moderate who did attend, to his later regret.[40] A militant group known as the Mingo Creek Association dominated the convention and issued radical demands. As some of them had done in the American Revolution, they raised liberty poles, formed committees of correspondence, and took control of the local militia. They created an extralegal court and discouraged lawsuits for debt collection and foreclosures.[41]

Hamilton regarded the second Pittsburgh convention as a serious threat to the operation of the laws of the federal government. In September 1792, he sent Pennsylvania tax official George Clymer to western Pennsylvania to investigate. Clymer only increased tensions with a clumsy attempt at traveling in disguise and attempting to intimidate local officials. His somewhat exaggerated report greatly influenced the decisions made by the Washington administration.[42] Washington and Hamilton viewed resistance to federal laws in Pennsylvania as particularly embarrassing, since the national capital was then located in the same state. On his own initiative, Hamilton drafted a presidential proclamation denouncing resistance to the excise laws and submitted it to Attorney General Randolph, who toned down some of the language. Washington signed the proclamation on September 15, 1792, and it was published as a broadsheet and printed in many newspapers.[43]

Federal tax inspector for western Pennsylvania General John Neville was determined to enforce the excise law.[44] He was a prominent politician and wealthy planter—and also a large-scale distiller. He had initially opposed the whiskey tax, but subsequently changed his mind, a reversal that angered some western Pennsylvanians.[45]In August 1792, Neville rented a room in Pittsburgh for his tax office, but the landlord turned him out after being threatened with violence by the Mingo Creek Association.[46] From this point on, tax collectors were not the only people targeted in Pennsylvania; those who cooperated with federal tax officials also faced harassment. Anonymous notes and newspaper articles signed by "Tom the Tinker" threatened those who complied with the whiskey tax.[47] Those who failed to heed the warnings might have their barns burned or their stills destroyed.[48]

Resistance to the excise tax continued through 1793 in the frontier counties of Appalachia. Opposition remained especially strident in western Pennsylvania.[49] In June, Neville was burned in effigy by a crowd of about 100 people in Washington County.[50] On the night of November 22, 1793, men broke into the home of tax collector Benjamin Wells in Fayette County. Wells was, like Neville, one of the wealthier men in the region.[51] At gunpoint, the intruders forced him to surrender his commission.[49] President Washington offered a reward for the arrest of the assailants, to no avail.[52]

In addition to the unrest in Fayette county, on August 9, 1794, 30 men surrounded the house of William McCleery, the local tax collector in Morgantown, Virginia, as retaliation for the new whiskey taxes. McCleery felt threatened enough by the angry mob to disguise himself as a slave, flee from his home and swim across the river to safety. The subsequent three-day siege of Morgantown by outsiders and townspeople led state authorities to fear that the events would influence other frontier counties to join the anti-tax movement.[53]

Insurrection

 
In his 1796 book, Congressman William Findley argued that Alexander Hamilton had deliberately provoked the Whiskey Rebellion.

The resistance came to a climax in 1794. In May of that year, federal district attorney William Rawle issued subpoenas for more than 60 distillers in Pennsylvania who had not paid the excise tax.[54] Under the law then in effect, distillers who received these writs would be obligated to travel to Philadelphia to appear in federal court. For farmers on the western frontier, such a journey was expensive, time-consuming, and beyond their means.[55] At the urging of William Findley, Congress modified this law on June 5, 1794, allowing excise trials to be held in local state courts.[56] But by that time, U.S. marshal David Lenox had already been sent to serve the writs summoning delinquent distillers to Philadelphia. Attorney General William Bradford later maintained that the writs were meant to compel compliance with the law, and that the government did not actually intend to hold trials in Philadelphia.[57]

The timing of these events later proved to be controversial. Findley was a bitter political foe of Hamilton, and he maintained in his book on the insurrection that the treasury secretary had deliberately provoked the uprising by issuing the subpoenas just before the law was made less onerous.[58] In 1963, historian Jacob Cooke, an editor of Hamilton's papers, regarded this charge as "preposterous", calling it a "conspiracy thesis" that overstated Hamilton's control of the federal government.[59] In 1986, historian Thomas Slaughter argued that the outbreak of the insurrection at this moment was due to "a string of ironic coincidences", although "the question about motives must always remain".[60] In 2006, William Hogeland, who is generally critical of Hamilton's role in American history, argued that Hamilton, Bradford, and Rawle intentionally pursued a course of action that would provoke "the kind of violence that would justify federal military suppression".[61] Hogeland claimed that Hamilton had been working towards this moment since the Newburgh Crisis in 1783, where he conceived of using military force to crush popular resistance to direct taxation in the same vein as the Whiskey Rebellion.[62] Historian S. E. Morison believed that Hamilton, in general, wished to enforce the excise law "more as a measure of social discipline than as a source of revenue".[63]

Battle of Bower Hill

Federal Marshal Lenox delivered most of the writs without incident. On July 15, he was joined on his rounds by General Neville, who had offered to act as his guide in Allegheny County.[64] That evening, warning shots were fired at the men at the Miller farm, about 10 mi (16 km) south of Pittsburgh. Neville returned home while Lenox retreated to Pittsburgh.[65]

On July 16, at least 30 Mingo Creek militiamen surrounded Neville's fortified home of Bower Hill.[66] They demanded the surrender of the federal marshal, whom they believed to be inside. Neville responded by firing a gunshot that mortally wounded Oliver Miller, one of the "rebels".[67] The rebels opened fire but were unable to dislodge Neville, who had his slaves' help to defend the house.[68] The rebels retreated to nearby Couch's Fort to gather reinforcements.[69]

The next day, the rebels returned to Bower Hill. Their force had swelled to nearly 600 men, now commanded by Major James McFarlane, a veteran of the Revolutionary War.[70] Neville had also received reinforcements: 10 U.S. Army soldiers from Pittsburgh under the command of Major Abraham Kirkpatrick, Neville's brother-in-law.[71] Before the rebel force arrived, Kirkpatrick had Neville leave the house and hide in a nearby ravine. David Lenox and General Neville's son Presley Neville also returned to the area, though they could not get into the house and were captured by the rebels.[72]

Following some fruitless negotiations, the women and children were allowed to leave the house, and then both sides began firing. After about an hour, McFarlane called a ceasefire; according to some, a white flag had been waved in the house. As McFarlane stepped into the open, a shot rang out from the house, and he fell mortally wounded. The enraged rebels then set fire to the house, including the slave quarters, and Kirkpatrick surrendered.[73] The number of casualties at Bower Hill is unclear; McFarlane and one or two other militiamen were killed; one U.S. soldier may have died from wounds received in the fight.[74] The rebels sent the U.S. soldiers away. Kirkpatrick, Lenox, and Presley Neville were kept as prisoners, but they later escaped.[75]

March on Pittsburgh

 
Portrait of Hugh Henry Brackenridge, a western opponent of the whiskey tax who tried to prevent violent resistance

McFarlane was given a hero's funeral on July 18. His "murder", as the rebels saw it, further radicalized the countryside.[76] Moderates such as Brackenridge were hard-pressed to restrain the populace. Radical leaders emerged, such as David Bradford, urging violent resistance. On July 26, a group headed by Bradford robbed the U.S. mail as it left Pittsburgh, hoping to discover who in that town opposed them and finding several letters that condemned the rebels. Bradford and his band called for a military assembly to meet at Braddock's Field, about 8 mi (13 km) east of Pittsburgh.[77]

On August 1, about 7,000 people gathered at Braddock's Field.[78] The crowd consisted primarily of poor people who owned no land, and most did not own whiskey stills. The furor over the whiskey excise had unleashed anger about other economic grievances. By this time, the victims of violence were often wealthy property owners who had no connection to the whiskey tax.[79] Some of the most radical protesters wanted to march on Pittsburgh, which they called "Sodom", loot the homes of the wealthy, and then burn the town to the ground.[80] Others wanted to attack Fort Fayette. There was praise for the French Revolution and calls for bringing the guillotine to America. David Bradford, it was said, was comparing himself to Robespierre, a leader of the French Reign of Terror.[81]

At Braddock's Field, there was talk of declaring independence from the United States and of joining with Spain or Great Britain. Radicals flew a specially designed flag that proclaimed their independence. The flag had six stripes, one for each county represented at the gathering: the Pennsylvania counties of Allegheny, Bedford, Fayette, Washington, and Westmoreland, and Virginia's Ohio County.[82]

Pittsburgh citizens helped to defuse the threat by banishing three men whose intercepted letters had given offense to the rebels, and by sending a delegation to Braddock's Field that expressed support for the gathering.[83] Brackenridge prevailed upon the crowd to limit the protest to a defiant march through the town. In Pittsburgh, Major Kirkpatrick's barns were burned, but nothing else.[84]

Meeting at Whiskey Point

Whiskey Point
LocationMain Street between First Street & Park Avenue
Monongahela
Coordinates40°12′01″N 79°55′21″W / 40.2002°N 79.9226°W / 40.2002; -79.9226
PHMC dedicatedMay 26, 1949[85]

A convention was held on August 14 of 226 whiskey rebels from the six counties, held at Parkinson's Ferry (now known as Whiskey Point) in present-day Monongahela. The convention considered resolutions that were drafted by Brackenridge, Gallatin, David Bradford, and an eccentric preacher named Herman Husband, a delegate from Bedford County. Husband was a well-known local figure and a radical champion of democracy who had taken part in the Regulator movement in North Carolina 25 years earlier.[86] The Parkinson's Ferry convention also appointed a committee to meet with the peace commissioners who had been sent west by President Washington.[87] There, Gallatin presented an eloquent speech in favor of peace and against proposals from Bradford to further revolt.[85]

Federal response

President Washington was confronted with what appeared to be an armed insurrection in western Pennsylvania, and he proceeded cautiously while determined to maintain governmental authority. He did not want to alienate public opinion, so he asked his cabinet for written opinions about how to deal with the crisis. The cabinet recommended the use of force, except for Secretary of State Edmund Randolph who urged reconciliation.[88] Washington did both: he sent commissioners to meet with the rebels while raising a militia army. Washington privately doubted that the commissioners could accomplish anything, and believed that a military expedition would be needed to suppress further violence.[89] For this reason, historians have sometimes charged that the peace commission was sent only for the sake of appearances, and that the use of force was never in doubt.[90] Historians Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick argued that the military expedition was "itself a part of the reconciliation process", since a show of overwhelming force would make further violence less likely.[91]

Meanwhile, Hamilton began publishing essays under the name of "Tully" in Philadelphia newspapers, denouncing mob violence in western Pennsylvania and advocating military action. Democratic-Republican Societies had been formed throughout the country, and Washington and Hamilton believed that they were the source of civic unrest. "Historians are not yet agreed on the exact role of the societies" in the Whiskey Rebellion, wrote historian Mark Spencer in 2003, "but there was a degree of overlap between society membership and the Whiskey Rebels".[92]

Before troops could be raised, the Militia Act of 1792 required a justice of the United States Supreme Court to certify that law enforcement was beyond the control of local authorities. On August 4, 1794, Justice James Wilson delivered his opinion that western Pennsylvania was in a state of rebellion.[93] On August 7, Washington issued a presidential proclamation announcing, with "the deepest regret", that the militia would be called out to suppress the rebellion. He commanded insurgents in western Pennsylvania to disperse by September 1.[94]

Negotiations

In early August 1794, Washington dispatched three commissioners to the west, all of them Pennsylvanians: Attorney General William Bradford, Justice Jasper Yeates of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and Senator James Ross. Beginning on August 21, the commissioners met with a committee of westerners that included Brackenridge and Gallatin. The government commissioners told the committee that it must unanimously agree to renounce violence and submit to U.S. laws and that a popular referendum must be held to determine if the local people supported the decision. Those who agreed to these terms would be given amnesty from further prosecution.[95]

The committee was divided between radicals and moderates, and narrowly passed a resolution agreeing to submit to the government's terms. The popular referendum was held on September 11 and also produced mixed results. Some townships overwhelmingly supported submitting to U.S. law, but opposition to the government remained strong in areas where poor and landless people predominated.[96] On September 24, 1794, Washington received a recommendation from the commissioners that in their judgment, "(it was) ... necessary that the civil authority should be aided by a military force in order to secure a due execution of the laws..."[97] On September 25, Washington issued a proclamation summoning the New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia militias into service and warned that anyone who aided the insurgents did so at their own peril.[97][98] The trend was towards submission, however, and westerners dispatched representatives William Findley and David Redick to meet with Washington and to halt the progress of the oncoming army. Washington and Hamilton declined, arguing that violence was likely to re-emerge if the army turned back.[96]

Militia expedition

Under the authority of the recently passed federal militia law, the state militias were called up by the governors of New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. The federalized militia force of 12,950 men was a large army by American standards of the time, comparable to Washington's armies during the Revolution.[99] Relatively few men volunteered for militia service, so a draft was used to fill out the ranks. Draft evasion was widespread, and conscription efforts resulted in protests and riots, even in eastern areas. Three counties in eastern Virginia were the scenes of armed draft resistance. In Maryland, Governor Thomas Sim Lee sent 800 men to quash an anti-draft riot in Hagerstown; about 150 people were arrested.[100]

 
Photo of Albert Gallatin, who spoke publicly to rebel groups about the need for moderation

Liberty poles were raised in various places as the militia was recruited, worrying federal officials. A liberty pole was raised in Carlisle, Pennsylvania on September 11, 1794.[101] The federalized militia arrived in that town later that month and rounded up suspected pole-raisers. Two civilians were killed in these operations. On September 29, an unarmed boy was shot by an officer whose pistol accidentally fired. Two days later, an "Itinerant Person" was "Bayoneted" to death by a soldier while resisting arrest (the man had tried to wrest the rifle from the soldier he confronted; it is possible he had been a member of a 500-strong Irish work crew nearby who were "digging, a canal into the Sculkill" [sic]; at least one of that work gang's members protested the killing so vigorously that he was "put under guard").[102] President Washington ordered the arrest of the two soldiers and had them turned over to civilian authorities. A state judge determined that the deaths had been accidental, and the soldiers were released.[103]

Washington left Philadelphia (which at that time was the capital of the United States) on September 30 to review the progress of the military expedition.[97] According to historian Joseph Ellis, this was "the first and only time a sitting American president led troops in the field".[104]

Along the way he traveled to Reading, Pennsylvania on his way to meet up with the rest of the militia he ordered mobilized at Carlisle.[97] On the second of October, Washington left Reading, Pennsylvania heading west to Womelsdorf in order to "view the (Schuylkill and Susquehanna Navigation Company) canal...".[97] Revolutionary war and Siege of Yorktown veteran, Colonel Jonathan Forman (1755–1809) led the Third Infantry Regiment of New Jersey troops against the Whiskey Rebellion and wrote about his encounter with Washington:[105]

October 3d Marched early in the morning for Harrisburgh [sic], where we arrived about 12 O'clock. About 1 O'Clock recd. information of the Presidents approach on which, I had the regiment paraded, timely for his reception, & considerably to my satisfaction. Being afterwards invited to his quarters he made enquiry into the circumstances of the man [an incident between an "Itinerant Person" and "an Old Soldier" mentioned earlier in the journal (p. 3)] & seemed satisfied with the information.[102]

Washington met with the western representatives in Bedford, Pennsylvania on October 9 before going to Fort Cumberland in Maryland to review the southern wing of the army.[106] He was convinced that the federalized militia would meet little resistance, and he placed the army under the command of the Virginia Governor Henry "Lighthorse Harry" Lee, a hero of the Revolutionary War. Washington returned to Philadelphia; Hamilton remained with the army as civilian adviser.[107]

Daniel Morgan, the victor of the Battle of Cowpens during the American Revolution, was called up to lead a force to suppress the protest. It was at this time (1794) that Morgan was promoted to Major General. Serving under General "Light-Horse Harry" Lee, Morgan led one wing of the militia army into Western Pennsylvania.[108] The massive show of force brought an end to the protests without a shot being fired. After the uprising had been suppressed, Morgan commanded the remnant of the army that remained until 1795 in Pennsylvania, some 1,200 militiamen, one of whom was Meriwether Lewis.[109]

Aftermath

The insurrection collapsed as the federal army marched west into western Pennsylvania in October 1794. Some of the most prominent leaders of the insurrection, such as David Bradford, fled westward to safety. It took six months for those who were charged to be tried. Most were acquitted due to mistaken identity, unreliable testimony and lack of witnesses. Two were sentenced to hang, see below.

Immediately before the arrests "... as many as 2,000 of [the rebels]...had fled into the mountains, beyond the reach of the militia. It was a great disappointment to Hamilton, who had hoped to bring rebel leaders such as David Bradford to trial in Philadelphia...and possibly see them hanged for treason. Instead, when the militia at last turned back, out of all the suspects they had seized a mere twenty were selected to serve as examples, They were at worst bit players in the uprising, but they were better than nothing."[110]

The captured participants and the Federal militia arrived in Philadelphia on Christmas Day. Some artillery was fired and church bells were heard as "...  a huge throng lined Broad Street to cheer the troops and mock the rebels ... [Presley] Neville said he 'could not help feeling sorry for them. The captured rebels were paraded down Broad Street being 'humiliated, bedraggled, [and] half-starved  ...' "[110]

Other accounts describe the indictment of 24 men for high treason.[111] Most of the accused had eluded capture, so only ten men stood trial for treason in federal court.[111] Of these, only Philip Wigle[114] and John Mitchell were convicted. Wigle had beaten up a tax collector and burned his house; Mitchell was a simpleton who had been convinced by David Bradford to rob the U.S. mail. These, the only two convicted of treason and sentenced to death by hanging, were later pardoned by President Washington.[110][115][116][117] Pennsylvania state courts were more successful in prosecuting lawbreakers, securing numerous convictions for assault and rioting.[118]

In his seventh State of the Union Address, Washington explained his decision to pardon Mitchell and Wigle. Hamilton and John Jay drafted the address, as they had others, before Washington made the final edit:-

"The misled have abandoned their errors," he stated. "For though I shall always think it a sacred duty to exercise with firmness and energy the constitutional powers with which I am vested, yet it appears to me no less consistent with the public good than it is with my personal feelings to mingle in the operations of Government every degree of moderation and tenderness which the national justice, dignity, and safety may permit"[119][120]

While violent opposition to the whiskey tax ended, political opposition to the tax continued. Opponents of internal taxes rallied around the candidacy of Thomas Jefferson and helped him defeat President John Adams in the election of 1800. By 1802, Congress repealed the distilled spirits excise tax and all other internal Federal taxes. Until the War of 1812, the Federal government would rely solely on import tariffs for revenue, which quickly grew with the Nation's expanding foreign trade.[25]

Legacy

 
The James Miller House on the Oliver Miller Homestead located in South Park Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. In 1794, the first fired gunshots of the Whiskey Rebellion occurred on the property when revenue officers served a writ on William Miller. Shots were fired but the officers were not injured. Later, William was pardoned.

The Washington administration's suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion met with widespread popular approval.[121] The episode demonstrated that the new national government had the willingness and ability to suppress violent resistance to its laws. It was, therefore, viewed by the Washington administration as a success, a view that has generally been endorsed by historians.[122] The Washington administration and its supporters usually failed to mention, however, that the whiskey excise remained difficult to collect, and that many westerners continued to refuse to pay the tax.[36] The events contributed to the formation of political parties in the United States, a process already underway.[123] The whiskey tax was repealed after Thomas Jefferson's Republican Party came to power in 1801, which opposed the Federalist Party of Hamilton and Washington.[124]

The Rebellion raised the question of what kinds of protests were permissible under the new Constitution. Legal historian Christian G. Fritz argued that there was not yet a consensus about sovereignty in the United States, even after ratification of the Constitution. Federalists believed that the government was sovereign because it had been established by the people; radical protest actions were permissible during the American Revolution but were no longer legitimate, in their thinking. But the Whiskey Rebels and their defenders believed that the Revolution had established the people as a "collective sovereign", and the people had the collective right to change or challenge the government through extra-constitutional means.[125]

Historian Steven Boyd argued that the suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion prompted anti-Federalist westerners to finally accept the Constitution and to seek change by voting for Republicans rather than resisting the government. Federalists, for their part, came to accept the public's role in governance and no longer challenged the freedom of assembly and the right to petition.[126]

In popular culture

 
Susanna Rowson

Soon after the Whiskey Rebellion, actress-playwright Susanna Rowson wrote a stage musical about the insurrection entitled The Volunteers, with music by composer Alexander Reinagle. The play is now lost, but the songs survive and suggest that Rowson's interpretation was pro-Federalist. The musical celebrates as American heroes the militiamen who put down the rebellion, the "volunteers" of the title.[127] President Washington and Martha Washington attended a performance of the play in Philadelphia in January 1795.[128]

W. C. Fields recorded a comedy track in Les Paul's studio in 1946, shortly before his death, entitled "The Temperance Lecture" for the album W. C. Fields ... His Only Recording Plus 8 Songs by Mae West. The bit discussed Washington and his role in putting down the Whiskey Rebellion, and Fields wondered aloud whether "George put down a little of the vile stuff too."[129]

L. Neil Smith wrote the alternate history novel The Probability Broach in 1980 as part of his North American Confederacy Series. In it, Albert Gallatin joins the rebellion in 1794 to benefit the farmers, rather than the fledgling US Government as he did in reality. This results in the rebellion becoming a Second American Revolution. This eventually leads to George Washington being overthrown and executed for treason, the abrogation of the Constitution, and Gallatin being proclaimed the second president and serving as president until 1812.[130][131]

David Liss' 2008 novel The Whiskey Rebels covers many of the circumstances during 1788–92 that led to the 1794 Rebellion. The fictional protagonists are cast against an array of historical persons, including Alexander Hamilton, William Duer, Anne Bingham, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, Aaron Burr, and Philip Freneau.

In 2011, the Whiskey Rebellion Festival was started in Washington, Pennsylvania. This annual event is held in July and includes live music, food, and historic reenactments, featuring the "tar and feathering" of the tax collector.[132][133]

Other works which include events of the Whiskey Rebellion:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 210–14, 219.
  2. ^ Robert W. Coakley, The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Disorders, 1789–1878 (DIANE Publishing, 1996), 67.
  3. ^ Risen, Clay (December 6, 2013). "How America Learned to Love Whiskey". The Atlantic. Retrieved April 24, 2020.
  4. ^ Rorabaugh, W.J. The Alcoholic Republic: An American Tradition, 1979. Oxford University Press, 53.
  5. ^ Howlett, Leon. The Kentucky Bourbon Experience: A Visual Tour of Kentucky's Bourbon Distilleries, 2012, 7.
  6. ^ Carol Berkin, A Sovereign People: The Crises of the 1790s and the Birth of American Nationalism (2017) pp. 7–80.
  7. ^ Chernow 2004, p. 297.
  8. ^ Chernow 2004, pp. 327–30.
  9. ^ Chernow 2004, p. 341.
  10. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 27.
  11. ^ Chernow 2004, p. 342–43; Hogeland 2006, p. 63
  12. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 100.
  13. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 105; Hogeland 2006, p. 64
  14. ^ ch. 15, 1 Stat. 199
  15. ^ American State Papers [Finance: Volume 1], 110
  16. ^ "ExplorePAHistory.com – Stories from PA History". Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  17. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 97.
  18. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 66.
  19. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 68.
  20. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 67; Holt 2004, p. 30
  21. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 147–49; Hogeland 2006, pp. 68–70
  22. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 68–69; Holt 2004, p. 30
  23. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 148.
  24. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 148; Hogeland 2006, p. 69
  25. ^ a b c Hoover, Michael. "The Whiskey Rebellion". Regulations & Rulings Division, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, US Department of the Treasury. Retrieved February 17, 2017. (no date)   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  26. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 108.
  27. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 110.
  28. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 206.
  29. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 23–25; Slaughter 1986, p. 113
  30. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 24.
  31. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 114–15.
  32. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 113. Hogeland dates the attack on Johnson to September 7, the night before the Pittsburgh convention; Hogeland 2006, p. 24
  33. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 103–04.
  34. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 114.
  35. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 103.
  36. ^ a b Tachau 1985, pp. 97–118.
  37. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 117.
  38. ^ Gross, David M. (2014). 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns. Picket Line Press. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-1-4905-7274-1.
  39. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 119; Hogeland 2006, p. 124
  40. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 122–23.
  41. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 117–19, 122–23.
  42. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 125–27.
  43. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 119–23.
  44. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 151–53.
  45. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 97, 102.
  46. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 119–24.
  47. ^ Gross, David M. (2014). 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns. Picket Line Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4905-7274-1.
  48. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 130–31.
  49. ^ a b Slaughter 1986, p. 151.
  50. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 150.
  51. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 153.
  52. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 165.
  53. ^ Barksdale, K. T., & Lee, H. (2003). Our Rebellious Neighbors: Virginia's Border Counties during Pennsylvania's Whiskey Rebellion. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, pages 17-18, 111(1), 5-32., JStor link
  54. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 177; Cooke 1963, p. 328
  55. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 142.
  56. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 170.
  57. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 182.
  58. ^ Cooke 1963, p. 321.
  59. ^ Cooke 1963, pp. 321–22.
  60. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 183.
  61. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 124.
  62. ^ Hogeland, William (July 3, 2006). "Why the Whiskey Rebellion Is Worth Recalling Now". History News Network. from the original on August 10, 2010. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  63. ^ S. E. Morison, The Oxford History of the United States 1783–1917 (London: Oxford University Press, 1927), 182.
  64. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 177.
  65. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 146.
  66. ^ The number of militiamen in the first attack on Bower Hill varies in contemporary accounts; Hogeland 2006, p. 268
  67. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 179; Hogeland 2006, pp. 147–48.
  68. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 3.
  69. ^ Tucker, Spencer C. (June 11, 2014). The Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Early American Republic, 1783–1812: A Political, Social, and Military History [3 volumes]: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-59884-157-2. Retrieved February 10, 2017.
  70. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 150–51.
  71. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 179; Hogeland 2006, p. 152
  72. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 153.
  73. ^ Hogeland 2006, pp. 153–54; Slaughter 1986, pp. 3, 179–80.
  74. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 180.
  75. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 155–56.
  76. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 181–83.
  77. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 183–85.
  78. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 186; Hogeland, 172.
  79. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 186–87.
  80. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 187.
  81. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 188–89; Hogeland, 169.
  82. ^ Holt 2004, p. 10 Holt writes that earlier historians had misidentified the six counties represented by the flag.
  83. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 185.
  84. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 187–88; Hogeland, 170–77.
  85. ^ a b "Whiskey Point (Albert Gallatin) Historical Marker". Explore PA history. Retrieved January 9, 2017.
  86. ^ Holt 2004, pp. 54–57.
  87. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 188–89.
  88. ^ Elkins & McKitrick 1993, p. 480.
  89. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 197–99.
  90. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 199; Holt 2004, p. 11
  91. ^ Elkins & McKitrick 1993, p. 481.
  92. ^ Mark G. Spencer, "Democratic-Republican Societies", in Peter Knight, ed., Conspiracy Theories in American History (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO Press, 2003), 1:221.
  93. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 192–93, 196; Elkins & McKitrick 1993, p. 478
  94. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 196.
  95. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 199–200; Hogeland 2006, p. 199
  96. ^ a b Slaughter 1986, p. 203.
  97. ^ a b c d e Washington, G.; Jackson, D.; Twohig, D. (1976). The diaries of George Washington. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  98. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 205–06.
  99. ^ Chernow 2004, pp. 475–76; Hogeland, 189.
  100. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 210–14.
  101. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 208.
  102. ^ a b Forman, Jonathan. "Journal of Jonathan Forman (7 pgs.), September 21, 1794 – October 25, 1794: Box 1, Folder 1 Jonathan Forman Papers, September 21, 1794 – October 25, 1794, DAR.1982.01, Darlington Collection, Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh" (PDF). Retrieved August 2, 2017.
  103. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 205–06; Hogeland, 213.
  104. ^ Ellis, His Excellency, George Washington, 225.
  105. ^ Manella, Angela. "Jonathan Forman Papers Finding Aid". Archive Service Center, University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  106. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 215–16.
  107. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 216.
  108. ^ Higginbotham, pp. 189–91.
  109. ^ Higginbotham, pp. 193–98.
  110. ^ a b c Craughwell & Phelps 2008.
  111. ^ a b Ifft 1985, p. 172.
  112. ^ Slaughter 1986, pp. 290–91.
  113. ^ Craughwell, Thomas J.; Phelps, M. William (2008). Failures of the Presidents: From the Whiskey Rebellion and War of 1812 to the Bay of Pigs and War in Iraq. Fair Winds Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-61673-431-2.
  114. ^ Sources show a variety of spellings for his surname, including Vigol and Wigal.[112][113]
  115. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 219.
  116. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 238.
  117. ^ Ifft 1985, p. 176.
  118. ^ Ifft 1985, pp. 175–76.
  119. ^ Fitzpatrick, John C. (January 1939). The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745-1799 Volume 34 October 11, 1794-March 29, 1796. ISBN 9781623764449.
  120. ^ "The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745"
  121. ^ Elkins & McKitrick 1993, pp. 481–84.
  122. ^ Boyd 1994, p. 78.
  123. ^ Slaughter 1986, p. 221; Boyd 1994, p. 80
  124. ^ Hogeland 2006, p. 242.
  125. ^ Fritz, Christian G. Fritz (April 27, 2009). American Sovereigns: the People and America's Constitutional Tradition Before the Civil War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-12560-4.
  126. ^ Boyd 1994, pp. 80–83.
  127. ^ Vickers, Anita (2009). The New Nation. American Popular Culture Through History. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-313-31264-9.
  128. ^ Branson, Susan (2001). These Fiery Frenchified Dames: Women and Political Culture in Early National Philadelphia. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 181.
  129. ^ Smith, Ronald L. (1998). Comedy Stars at 78 RPM: Biographies and Discographies of 89 American and British Recording Artists, 1896–1946. McFarland. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7864-0462-9.
  130. ^ John J. Pierce, When world views collide: a study in imagination and evolution (Greenwood Press, 1989), 163.
  131. ^ Peter Josef Mühlbauer, "Frontiers and dystopias: Libertarian ideology in science fiction", in Dieter Plehwe et al., eds., Neoliberal Hegemony: A Global Critique (Taylor & Francis, 2006), 162.
  132. ^ "Washington Co. Festival Marks Whiskey Rebellion". WPXI. August 1, 2011. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  133. ^ . Whiskey Rebellion Festival. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved February 11, 2017.

Bibliography

  • Boyd, Steven R. (1994). "The Whiskey Rebellion, Popular Rights, and the Meaning of the First Amendment.". In Porter, David (ed.). The Whiskey Rebellion and the trans-Appalachian frontier. Washington, Pa.: Washington and Jefferson College. pp. 73–84. OCLC 894777540.
  • Chernow, Ron (2004). Alexander Hamilton. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-1-59420-009-0. OCLC 53083988 – via Internet Archive.
  • Cooke, Jacob E. (July 1963). "The Whiskey Insurrection: A Re-Evaluation". Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies. Penn State University Press. 30 (3): 316–346. ISSN 0031-4528. JSTOR 27770195. OCLC 5542845793.
  • Crytzer, Brady J. The Whiskey Rebellion: A Distilled History of an American Crisis (2023), a scholarly history
  • Elkins, Stanley M.; McKitrick, Eric L. (1993). "The Poplulist Impulse: 3. Popular Sovereignty and the End of the Rebellion". The Age of Federalism. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 474–488. ISBN 978-0-19-506890-0. OCLC 26720733 – via Internet Archive. 1995 edition available at doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195093810.003.0011
  • Hogeland, William (2006). The whiskey rebellion : George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and the frontier rebels who challenged America's newfound sovereignty. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-5491-5. OCLC 1036919582 – via Internet Archive.
  • Holt, Wythe (January 6, 2004). (PDF). University of Georgia. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 25, 2011. Presented on January 23, 2004 at the . Archived from the original on January 1, 2013.
  • Ifft, Richard A. (1985). "Treason in the Early Republic: The Federal Courts, Popular Protest, and Federalism During the Whiskey Insurrection". In Boyd, Steven R. (ed.). The Whiskey Rebellion: Past and Present Perspectives. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-24534-3. OCLC 11291120.
  • Slaughter, Thomas P. (1986). The Whiskey Rebellion: Frontier Epilogue to the American Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-977187-5. OCLC 770873834. Partial preview at The Whiskey Rebellion at Google Books
  • Tachau, Mary K. Bonsteel (1985). "A New Look at the Whiskey Rebellion". In Boyd, Steven R. (ed.). The Whiskey Rebellion: Past and Present Perspectives. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-24534-3. OCLC 11291120.

Further reading

  • Baldwin, Leland D.; Hunter, Ward; Western Pennsylvania Historical Survey (1968) [1939]. WWhiskey Rebels: The Story of a Frontier Uprising. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt5hjrsx. ISBN 978-0-8229-9053-6. OCLC 878136515.
  • Berkin, Carol (2017). "Part I: The Whiskey Rebellion". A Sovereign People: The Crises of the 1790s and the Birth of American Nationalism. New York: Basic Books. pp. 7–80. ISBN 978-0-465-09493-6. OCLC 961388695. Preview of first four chapters at A Sovereign People at Google Books
  • Bouton, Terry (2007). "The Pennsylvania Regulation of 1794: A Rebellion over Whiskey?". Taming Democracy: "The People," the Founders, and the Troubled Ending of the American Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 216–243. ISBN 978-1-4356-0544-2. OCLC 252691795.
  • Clouse, Jerry Allan; Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (1994). The Whiskey Rebellion: Southwestern Pennsylvania's Frontier People Test the American Constitution. Harrisburg [Pa.]: Bureau of Historic Preservation, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. ISBN 978-0-89271-057-7. OCLC 44167624.
  • Kohn, Richard H. (1972). "The Washington Administration's Decision to Crush the Whiskey Rebellion". The Journal of American History. Oxford University Press (OUP). 59 (3): 567–584. doi:10.2307/1900658. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 1900658. OCLC 5545202179.
  • Krom, Cynthia L.; Krom, Stephanie (2013). ""The Whiskey Tax of 1791 and The Consequent Insurrection: 'A Wicked and Happy Tumult'". The Accounting Historians Journal. The Academy of Accounting Historians. 40 (2): 91–113. ISSN 0148-4184. JSTOR 43486736. OCLC 7786247710.
  • McClure, James P. (Summer 1991). "'Let Us Be Independent': David Bradford and the Whiskey Insurrection". Pittsburgh History. 74 (2): 72–86. ISSN 1525-4755 – via Western Pennsylvania History.
  • Snyder, Jeffrey W.; Hammond, Thomas C. (2012). "'So That's What the Whiskey Rebellion Was!': Teaching Early U.S. History With GIS". The History Teacher. Society for History Education. 45 (3): 447–455. ISSN 0018-2745. JSTOR 23265898. OCLC 802921302.
  • Thompson, Charles (May 9, 2011). "Whiskey and Geography". Southern Spaces. Atlanta, GA, US: Emory University. doi:10.18737/m7w02c. ISSN 1551-2754. OCLC 7291008180.
  • Yoo, John (Fall 2010). "George Washington and the Executive Power". University of St. Thomas Journal of Law & Public Policy. 5 (1): 1–35. ISSN 2154-6436, 2154-6428.

Contemporary sources

  • Brackenridge, Henry Marie (1859). History of the Western Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania, commonly called the Whisky Insurrection, 1794. Pittsburgh: Printed by W.S. Haven. OCLC 11164920, 32351897.
  • Brackenridge, Hugh Henry (1795). Incidents of the Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania in the Year 1794. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by John M'Culloch. OCLC 642781686. Also see Incidents of the Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania in the Year 1794 at the Internet Archive.
  • Findley, William (1796). History of the Insurrection in the Four Western Counties of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Printed by S.H. Smith. OCLC 65336308, 1064603706.

External links

  • United States Congress (March 3, 1791). The Whiskey Act . Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Childs and John Swaine [Wikidata]. United States Statutes at Large, Volume 1, 1st Congress, 3rd Session, Chapter 15, pp. 199–214. OCLC 210086758 – via Wikisource.
  • Washington, George (1979). Jackson, Donald; Twohig, Dorothy (eds.). The diaries of George Washington. Vol. 6. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. pp. 178–198. ISBN 0-8139-0807-8. OCLC 644873705 – via Internet Archive.
  • "Whiskey Rebellion documents". Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. Retrieved September 6, 2022. (primary sources)

Washington's papers from the Avalon Project

  • George, Washington. "The Papers of George Washington" [textual records]. The Avalon Project. Yale, CT: Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School. OCLC 37342540.
    • "Proclamation of September 15, 1792". Retrieved September 6, 2022., warning against obstruction of the excise law
    • "Proclamation of Proclamation of August 7, 1794". Retrieved September 6, 2022., announcing the preliminary raising of militia and commanding the insurgents in western Pennsylvania to disperse
    • "Proclamation of September 25, 1794". Retrieved September 6, 2022., announcing the commencement of military operations
    • "Sixth Annual Message". November 19, 1794. Retrieved September 6, 2022. Washington dedicated most of this annual message to the Whiskey Rebellion.

whiskey, rebellion, confused, with, whisky, also, known, whiskey, insurrection, violent, protest, united, states, beginning, 1791, ending, 1794, during, presidency, george, washington, called, whiskey, first, imposed, domestic, product, newly, formed, federal,. Not to be confused with Whisky War The Whiskey Rebellion also known as the Whiskey Insurrection was a violent tax protest in the United States beginning in 1791 and ending in 1794 during the presidency of George Washington The so called whiskey tax was the first tax imposed on a domestic product by the newly formed federal government Beer was difficult to transport and spoiled more easily than rum and whiskey Rum distillation in the United States had been disrupted during the American Revolutionary War and whiskey distribution and consumption increased afterwards aggregate production had not surpassed rum by 1791 The whiskey tax became law in 1791 and was intended to generate revenue for the war debt incurred during the Revolutionary War The tax applied to all distilled spirits but consumption of American whiskey was rapidly expanding in the late 18th century so the excise became widely known as a whiskey tax 3 Farmers of the western frontier were accustomed to distilling their surplus rye barley wheat corn or fermented grain mixtures to make whiskey These farmers resisted the tax In these regions whiskey often served as a medium of exchange Many of the resisters were war veterans who believed that they were fighting for the principles of the American Revolution in particular against taxation without local representation while the federal government maintained that the taxes were the legal expression of Congressional taxation powers Whiskey RebellionGeorge Washington reviews the troops near Fort Cumberland Maryland before their march to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion in western Pennsylvania Date1791 1794Locationprimarily Western PennsylvaniaResultGovernment victoryBelligerentsFrontier tax protestersUnited States governmentCommanders and leadersJames McFarlane George Washington Alexander Hamilton Henry Lee IIIThomas Sim LeeUnits involvedRebelsRegular armyUS Marshals Service State militia from VirginiaMarylandNew JerseyPennsylvaniaStrength600 Pennsylvania rebels13 000 Virginia Maryland New Jersey and Pennsylvania militia10 regular army troopsCasualties and losses3 4 killed170 captured 1 None About 12 died from illness or in accidents 2 2 civilian casualties Throughout Western Pennsylvania counties protesters used violence and intimidation to prevent federal officials from collecting the tax Resistance came to a climax in July 1794 when a US marshal arrived in western Pennsylvania to serve writs to distillers who had not paid the excise The alarm was raised and more than 500 armed men attacked the fortified home of tax inspector John Neville Washington responded by sending peace commissioners to western Pennsylvania to negotiate with the rebels while at the same time calling on governors to send a militia force to enforce the tax Washington himself rode at the head of an army to suppress the insurgency with 13 000 militiamen provided by the governors of Virginia Maryland New Jersey and Pennsylvania The rebels all went home before the arrival of the army and there was no confrontation About 20 men were arrested but all were later acquitted or pardoned Most distillers in nearby Kentucky were found to be all but impossible to tax in the next six years over 175 distillers from Kentucky were convicted of violating the tax law 4 Numerous examples of resistance are recorded in court documents and newspaper accounts 5 The Whiskey Rebellion demonstrated that the new national government had the will and ability to suppress violent resistance to its laws though the whiskey excise remained difficult to collect The events contributed to the formation of political parties in the United States a process already under way The whiskey tax was repealed in the early 1800s during the Jefferson administration Historian Carol Berkin argues that the episode in the long run strengthened US nationalism because the people appreciated how well Washington handled the rebels without resorting to tyranny 6 Contents 1 Whiskey tax 2 Western grievances 3 Resistance 4 Insurrection 4 1 Battle of Bower Hill 4 2 March on Pittsburgh 4 3 Meeting at Whiskey Point 4 4 Federal response 4 4 1 Negotiations 4 4 2 Militia expedition 4 5 Aftermath 5 Legacy 5 1 In popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 9 1 Contemporary sources 10 External links 10 1 Washington s papers from the Avalon ProjectWhiskey tax Alexander Hamilton in a 1792 portrait by John TrumbullA new U S federal government began operating in 1789 following the ratification of the United States Constitution The previous central government under the Articles of Confederation had been unable to levy taxes it had borrowed money to meet expenses and fund the Revolutionary War accumulating 54 million in debt The state governments had amassed an additional 25 million in debt 7 Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton sought to use this debt to create a financial system that would promote American prosperity and national unity In his Report on Public Credit he urged Congress to consolidate the state and national debts into a single debt that would be funded by the federal government Congress approved these measures in June and July 1790 8 A source of government revenue was needed to pay the respectable amount due to the previous bondholders to whom the debt was owed By December 1790 Hamilton believed that import duties which were the government s primary source of revenue had been raised as high as feasible 9 He therefore promoted passage of an excise tax on domestically produced distilled spirits This was to be the first tax levied by the national government on a domestic product 10 The transportation costs per gallon were higher for farmers removed from eastern urban centers so the per gallon profit was reduced disproportionately by the per gallon tax on distillation of domestic alcohol such as whiskey The excise became known as the whiskey tax Taxes were politically unpopular and Hamilton believed that the whiskey excise was a luxury tax and would be the least objectionable tax that the government could levy 11 In this he had the support of some social reformers who hoped that a sin tax would raise public awareness about the harmful effects of alcohol 12 The whiskey excise act sometimes known as the Whiskey Act became law in March 1791 13 14 George Washington defined the revenue districts appointed the revenue supervisors and inspectors and set their pay in November 1791 15 Western grievancesThe population of Western Pennsylvania was 17 000 in 1790 16 Among the farmers in the region the whiskey excise was immediately controversial with many people on the frontier arguing that it unfairly targeted westerners 17 Whiskey was a popular drink and farmers often supplemented their incomes by operating small stills 18 Farmers living west of the Appalachian Mountains distilled their excess grain into whiskey which was easier and more profitable to transport over the mountains than the more cumbersome grain A whiskey tax would make western farmers less competitive with eastern grain producers 19 Additionally cash which at this time consisted of specie gold and silver coins was always in short supply on the frontier nevertheless the law explicitly stipulated the tax could only be paid in specie In lieu of specie whiskey often served as a medium of exchange which for poorer people who were paid in whiskey meant the excise was essentially an income tax that wealthier easterners did not have to pay 20 Small scale farmers also protested that Hamilton s excise effectively gave unfair tax breaks to large distillers most of whom were based in the east There were two methods of paying the whiskey excise paying a flat fee per still or paying by the gallon Large distillery produced whiskey in volume and could afford the flat fee The more efficient they became the less tax per gallon they would pay as low as 6 cents according to Hamilton Western farmers who owned small stills did not typically have either enough time nor enough surplus grain to operate them year round at full capacity so they ended up paying a higher tax per gallon 9 cents which made them less competitive 21 The regressive nature of the tax was further compounded by an additional factor whiskey sold for considerably less on the cash poor Western frontier than in the wealthier and more populous East This meant that even if all distillers had been required to pay the same amount of tax per gallon the small scale frontier distillers would still have to remit a considerably larger proportion of their product s value than larger Eastern distillers Less educated farmers who in this era were often illiterate also feared they would be cheated by corrupt tax collectors Small scale distillers believed that Hamilton deliberately designed the tax to ruin them and promote big business a view endorsed by some historians 22 However historian Thomas Slaughter argued that a conspiracy of this sort is difficult to document 23 Whether by design or not large distillers recognized the advantage that the excise gave them and they supported it 24 Other aspects of the excise law also caused concern The law required all stills to be registered and those cited for failure to pay the tax had to appear in distant Federal rather than local courts The only Federal courthouse was in Philadelphia some 300 miles away from the small frontier settlement of Pittsburgh From the beginning the Federal government had little success in collecting the whiskey tax along the frontier Many small western distillers simply refused to pay the tax Federal revenue officers and local residents who assisted them bore the brunt of the protesters ire Tax rebels harassed several whiskey tax collectors and threatened or beat those who offered them office space or housing As a result many western counties never had a resident Federal tax official 25 In addition to the whiskey tax westerners had a number of other grievances with the national government chief among which was the perception that the government was not adequately protecting the residents living in the western frontier 25 The Northwest Indian War was going badly for the United States with major losses in 1791 Furthermore westerners were prohibited by Spain which then owned Louisiana from using the Mississippi River for commercial navigation Until these issues were addressed westerners felt that the government was ignoring their security and economic welfare Adding the whiskey excise to these existing grievances only increased tensions on the frontier 26 ResistanceMany residents of the western frontier petitioned against passage of the whiskey excise When that failed some western Pennsylvanians organized extralegal conventions to advocate repeal of the law 27 Opposition to the tax was particularly prevalent in four southwestern counties Allegheny Fayette Washington and Westmoreland 28 A preliminary meeting held on July 27 1791 at Redstone Old Fort in Fayette County called for the selection of delegates to a more formal assembly which convened in Pittsburgh in early September 1791 The Pittsburgh convention was dominated by moderates such as Hugh Henry Brackenridge who hoped to prevent the outbreak of violence 29 The convention sent a petition for redress of grievances to the Pennsylvania Assembly and the U S House of Representatives both located in Philadelphia 30 As a result of this and other petitions the excise law was modified in May 1792 Changes included a 1 cent reduction in the tax that was advocated by William Findley a congressman from western Pennsylvania but the new excise law was still unsatisfactory to many westerners 31 Famous Whiskey Insurrection in Pennsylvania an 1880 illustration of a tarred and feathered tax collector being made to ride the railAppeals to nonviolent resistance were unsuccessful On September 11 1791 a recently appointed tax collector named Robert Johnson was tarred and feathered by a disguised gang in Washington County 32 A man sent by officials to serve court warrants to Johnson s attackers was whipped tarred and feathered 33 Because of these and other violent attacks the tax went uncollected in 1791 and early 1792 34 The attackers modeled their actions on the protests of the American Revolution Supporters of the excise argued that there was a difference between taxation without representation in colonial America and a tax laid by the elected representatives of the American people 35 Older accounts of the Whiskey Rebellion portrayed it as being confined to western Pennsylvania yet there was opposition to the whiskey tax in the western counties of every other state in Appalachia Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina and Georgia 36 The whiskey tax went uncollected throughout the frontier state of Kentucky where no one could be convinced to enforce the law or prosecute evaders 37 38 In 1792 Hamilton advocated military action to suppress violent resistance in western North Carolina but Attorney General Edmund Randolph argued that there was insufficient evidence to legally justify such a reaction 39 In August 1792 a second convention was held in Pittsburgh to discuss resistance to the whiskey tax This meeting was more radical than the first convention moderates such as Brackenridge and Findley were not in attendance Future Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin was one moderate who did attend to his later regret 40 A militant group known as the Mingo Creek Association dominated the convention and issued radical demands As some of them had done in the American Revolution they raised liberty poles formed committees of correspondence and took control of the local militia They created an extralegal court and discouraged lawsuits for debt collection and foreclosures 41 Hamilton regarded the second Pittsburgh convention as a serious threat to the operation of the laws of the federal government In September 1792 he sent Pennsylvania tax official George Clymer to western Pennsylvania to investigate Clymer only increased tensions with a clumsy attempt at traveling in disguise and attempting to intimidate local officials His somewhat exaggerated report greatly influenced the decisions made by the Washington administration 42 Washington and Hamilton viewed resistance to federal laws in Pennsylvania as particularly embarrassing since the national capital was then located in the same state On his own initiative Hamilton drafted a presidential proclamation denouncing resistance to the excise laws and submitted it to Attorney General Randolph who toned down some of the language Washington signed the proclamation on September 15 1792 and it was published as a broadsheet and printed in many newspapers 43 Federal tax inspector for western Pennsylvania General John Neville was determined to enforce the excise law 44 He was a prominent politician and wealthy planter and also a large scale distiller He had initially opposed the whiskey tax but subsequently changed his mind a reversal that angered some western Pennsylvanians 45 In August 1792 Neville rented a room in Pittsburgh for his tax office but the landlord turned him out after being threatened with violence by the Mingo Creek Association 46 From this point on tax collectors were not the only people targeted in Pennsylvania those who cooperated with federal tax officials also faced harassment Anonymous notes and newspaper articles signed by Tom the Tinker threatened those who complied with the whiskey tax 47 Those who failed to heed the warnings might have their barns burned or their stills destroyed 48 Resistance to the excise tax continued through 1793 in the frontier counties of Appalachia Opposition remained especially strident in western Pennsylvania 49 In June Neville was burned in effigy by a crowd of about 100 people in Washington County 50 On the night of November 22 1793 men broke into the home of tax collector Benjamin Wells in Fayette County Wells was like Neville one of the wealthier men in the region 51 At gunpoint the intruders forced him to surrender his commission 49 President Washington offered a reward for the arrest of the assailants to no avail 52 In addition to the unrest in Fayette county on August 9 1794 30 men surrounded the house of William McCleery the local tax collector in Morgantown Virginia as retaliation for the new whiskey taxes McCleery felt threatened enough by the angry mob to disguise himself as a slave flee from his home and swim across the river to safety The subsequent three day siege of Morgantown by outsiders and townspeople led state authorities to fear that the events would influence other frontier counties to join the anti tax movement 53 Insurrection In his 1796 book Congressman William Findley argued that Alexander Hamilton had deliberately provoked the Whiskey Rebellion The resistance came to a climax in 1794 In May of that year federal district attorney William Rawle issued subpoenas for more than 60 distillers in Pennsylvania who had not paid the excise tax 54 Under the law then in effect distillers who received these writs would be obligated to travel to Philadelphia to appear in federal court For farmers on the western frontier such a journey was expensive time consuming and beyond their means 55 At the urging of William Findley Congress modified this law on June 5 1794 allowing excise trials to be held in local state courts 56 But by that time U S marshal David Lenox had already been sent to serve the writs summoning delinquent distillers to Philadelphia Attorney General William Bradford later maintained that the writs were meant to compel compliance with the law and that the government did not actually intend to hold trials in Philadelphia 57 The timing of these events later proved to be controversial Findley was a bitter political foe of Hamilton and he maintained in his book on the insurrection that the treasury secretary had deliberately provoked the uprising by issuing the subpoenas just before the law was made less onerous 58 In 1963 historian Jacob Cooke an editor of Hamilton s papers regarded this charge as preposterous calling it a conspiracy thesis that overstated Hamilton s control of the federal government 59 In 1986 historian Thomas Slaughter argued that the outbreak of the insurrection at this moment was due to a string of ironic coincidences although the question about motives must always remain 60 In 2006 William Hogeland who is generally critical of Hamilton s role in American history argued that Hamilton Bradford and Rawle intentionally pursued a course of action that would provoke the kind of violence that would justify federal military suppression 61 Hogeland claimed that Hamilton had been working towards this moment since the Newburgh Crisis in 1783 where he conceived of using military force to crush popular resistance to direct taxation in the same vein as the Whiskey Rebellion 62 Historian S E Morison believed that Hamilton in general wished to enforce the excise law more as a measure of social discipline than as a source of revenue 63 Battle of Bower Hill Federal Marshal Lenox delivered most of the writs without incident On July 15 he was joined on his rounds by General Neville who had offered to act as his guide in Allegheny County 64 That evening warning shots were fired at the men at the Miller farm about 10 mi 16 km south of Pittsburgh Neville returned home while Lenox retreated to Pittsburgh 65 On July 16 at least 30 Mingo Creek militiamen surrounded Neville s fortified home of Bower Hill 66 They demanded the surrender of the federal marshal whom they believed to be inside Neville responded by firing a gunshot that mortally wounded Oliver Miller one of the rebels 67 The rebels opened fire but were unable to dislodge Neville who had his slaves help to defend the house 68 The rebels retreated to nearby Couch s Fort to gather reinforcements 69 The next day the rebels returned to Bower Hill Their force had swelled to nearly 600 men now commanded by Major James McFarlane a veteran of the Revolutionary War 70 Neville had also received reinforcements 10 U S Army soldiers from Pittsburgh under the command of Major Abraham Kirkpatrick Neville s brother in law 71 Before the rebel force arrived Kirkpatrick had Neville leave the house and hide in a nearby ravine David Lenox and General Neville s son Presley Neville also returned to the area though they could not get into the house and were captured by the rebels 72 Following some fruitless negotiations the women and children were allowed to leave the house and then both sides began firing After about an hour McFarlane called a ceasefire according to some a white flag had been waved in the house As McFarlane stepped into the open a shot rang out from the house and he fell mortally wounded The enraged rebels then set fire to the house including the slave quarters and Kirkpatrick surrendered 73 The number of casualties at Bower Hill is unclear McFarlane and one or two other militiamen were killed one U S soldier may have died from wounds received in the fight 74 The rebels sent the U S soldiers away Kirkpatrick Lenox and Presley Neville were kept as prisoners but they later escaped 75 March on Pittsburgh Portrait of Hugh Henry Brackenridge a western opponent of the whiskey tax who tried to prevent violent resistanceMcFarlane was given a hero s funeral on July 18 His murder as the rebels saw it further radicalized the countryside 76 Moderates such as Brackenridge were hard pressed to restrain the populace Radical leaders emerged such as David Bradford urging violent resistance On July 26 a group headed by Bradford robbed the U S mail as it left Pittsburgh hoping to discover who in that town opposed them and finding several letters that condemned the rebels Bradford and his band called for a military assembly to meet at Braddock s Field about 8 mi 13 km east of Pittsburgh 77 On August 1 about 7 000 people gathered at Braddock s Field 78 The crowd consisted primarily of poor people who owned no land and most did not own whiskey stills The furor over the whiskey excise had unleashed anger about other economic grievances By this time the victims of violence were often wealthy property owners who had no connection to the whiskey tax 79 Some of the most radical protesters wanted to march on Pittsburgh which they called Sodom loot the homes of the wealthy and then burn the town to the ground 80 Others wanted to attack Fort Fayette There was praise for the French Revolution and calls for bringing the guillotine to America David Bradford it was said was comparing himself to Robespierre a leader of the French Reign of Terror 81 At Braddock s Field there was talk of declaring independence from the United States and of joining with Spain or Great Britain Radicals flew a specially designed flag that proclaimed their independence The flag had six stripes one for each county represented at the gathering the Pennsylvania counties of Allegheny Bedford Fayette Washington and Westmoreland and Virginia s Ohio County 82 Pittsburgh citizens helped to defuse the threat by banishing three men whose intercepted letters had given offense to the rebels and by sending a delegation to Braddock s Field that expressed support for the gathering 83 Brackenridge prevailed upon the crowd to limit the protest to a defiant march through the town In Pittsburgh Major Kirkpatrick s barns were burned but nothing else 84 Meeting at Whiskey Point Whiskey PointPennsylvania Historical MarkerLocationMain Street between First Street amp Park AvenueMonongahelaCoordinates40 12 01 N 79 55 21 W 40 2002 N 79 9226 W 40 2002 79 9226PHMC dedicatedMay 26 1949 85 A convention was held on August 14 of 226 whiskey rebels from the six counties held at Parkinson s Ferry now known as Whiskey Point in present day Monongahela The convention considered resolutions that were drafted by Brackenridge Gallatin David Bradford and an eccentric preacher named Herman Husband a delegate from Bedford County Husband was a well known local figure and a radical champion of democracy who had taken part in the Regulator movement in North Carolina 25 years earlier 86 The Parkinson s Ferry convention also appointed a committee to meet with the peace commissioners who had been sent west by President Washington 87 There Gallatin presented an eloquent speech in favor of peace and against proposals from Bradford to further revolt 85 Federal response President Washington was confronted with what appeared to be an armed insurrection in western Pennsylvania and he proceeded cautiously while determined to maintain governmental authority He did not want to alienate public opinion so he asked his cabinet for written opinions about how to deal with the crisis The cabinet recommended the use of force except for Secretary of State Edmund Randolph who urged reconciliation 88 Washington did both he sent commissioners to meet with the rebels while raising a militia army Washington privately doubted that the commissioners could accomplish anything and believed that a military expedition would be needed to suppress further violence 89 For this reason historians have sometimes charged that the peace commission was sent only for the sake of appearances and that the use of force was never in doubt 90 Historians Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick argued that the military expedition was itself a part of the reconciliation process since a show of overwhelming force would make further violence less likely 91 Meanwhile Hamilton began publishing essays under the name of Tully in Philadelphia newspapers denouncing mob violence in western Pennsylvania and advocating military action Democratic Republican Societies had been formed throughout the country and Washington and Hamilton believed that they were the source of civic unrest Historians are not yet agreed on the exact role of the societies in the Whiskey Rebellion wrote historian Mark Spencer in 2003 but there was a degree of overlap between society membership and the Whiskey Rebels 92 Before troops could be raised the Militia Act of 1792 required a justice of the United States Supreme Court to certify that law enforcement was beyond the control of local authorities On August 4 1794 Justice James Wilson delivered his opinion that western Pennsylvania was in a state of rebellion 93 On August 7 Washington issued a presidential proclamation announcing with the deepest regret that the militia would be called out to suppress the rebellion He commanded insurgents in western Pennsylvania to disperse by September 1 94 Negotiations In early August 1794 Washington dispatched three commissioners to the west all of them Pennsylvanians Attorney General William Bradford Justice Jasper Yeates of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and Senator James Ross Beginning on August 21 the commissioners met with a committee of westerners that included Brackenridge and Gallatin The government commissioners told the committee that it must unanimously agree to renounce violence and submit to U S laws and that a popular referendum must be held to determine if the local people supported the decision Those who agreed to these terms would be given amnesty from further prosecution 95 The committee was divided between radicals and moderates and narrowly passed a resolution agreeing to submit to the government s terms The popular referendum was held on September 11 and also produced mixed results Some townships overwhelmingly supported submitting to U S law but opposition to the government remained strong in areas where poor and landless people predominated 96 On September 24 1794 Washington received a recommendation from the commissioners that in their judgment it was necessary that the civil authority should be aided by a military force in order to secure a due execution of the laws 97 On September 25 Washington issued a proclamation summoning the New Jersey Pennsylvania Maryland and Virginia militias into service and warned that anyone who aided the insurgents did so at their own peril 97 98 The trend was towards submission however and westerners dispatched representatives William Findley and David Redick to meet with Washington and to halt the progress of the oncoming army Washington and Hamilton declined arguing that violence was likely to re emerge if the army turned back 96 Militia expedition Under the authority of the recently passed federal militia law the state militias were called up by the governors of New Jersey Maryland Virginia and Pennsylvania The federalized militia force of 12 950 men was a large army by American standards of the time comparable to Washington s armies during the Revolution 99 Relatively few men volunteered for militia service so a draft was used to fill out the ranks Draft evasion was widespread and conscription efforts resulted in protests and riots even in eastern areas Three counties in eastern Virginia were the scenes of armed draft resistance In Maryland Governor Thomas Sim Lee sent 800 men to quash an anti draft riot in Hagerstown about 150 people were arrested 100 Photo of Albert Gallatin who spoke publicly to rebel groups about the need for moderationLiberty poles were raised in various places as the militia was recruited worrying federal officials A liberty pole was raised in Carlisle Pennsylvania on September 11 1794 101 The federalized militia arrived in that town later that month and rounded up suspected pole raisers Two civilians were killed in these operations On September 29 an unarmed boy was shot by an officer whose pistol accidentally fired Two days later an Itinerant Person was Bayoneted to death by a soldier while resisting arrest the man had tried to wrest the rifle from the soldier he confronted it is possible he had been a member of a 500 strong Irish work crew nearby who were digging a canal into the Sculkill sic at least one of that work gang s members protested the killing so vigorously that he was put under guard 102 President Washington ordered the arrest of the two soldiers and had them turned over to civilian authorities A state judge determined that the deaths had been accidental and the soldiers were released 103 Washington left Philadelphia which at that time was the capital of the United States on September 30 to review the progress of the military expedition 97 According to historian Joseph Ellis this was the first and only time a sitting American president led troops in the field 104 Along the way he traveled to Reading Pennsylvania on his way to meet up with the rest of the militia he ordered mobilized at Carlisle 97 On the second of October Washington left Reading Pennsylvania heading west to Womelsdorf in order to view the Schuylkill and Susquehanna Navigation Company canal 97 Revolutionary war and Siege of Yorktown veteran Colonel Jonathan Forman 1755 1809 led the Third Infantry Regiment of New Jersey troops against the Whiskey Rebellion and wrote about his encounter with Washington 105 October 3d Marched early in the morning for Harrisburgh sic where we arrived about 12 O clock About 1 O Clock recd information of the Presidents approach on which I had the regiment paraded timely for his reception amp considerably to my satisfaction Being afterwards invited to his quarters he made enquiry into the circumstances of the man an incident between an Itinerant Person and an Old Soldier mentioned earlier in the journal p 3 amp seemed satisfied with the information 102 Washington met with the western representatives in Bedford Pennsylvania on October 9 before going to Fort Cumberland in Maryland to review the southern wing of the army 106 He was convinced that the federalized militia would meet little resistance and he placed the army under the command of the Virginia Governor Henry Lighthorse Harry Lee a hero of the Revolutionary War Washington returned to Philadelphia Hamilton remained with the army as civilian adviser 107 Daniel Morgan the victor of the Battle of Cowpens during the American Revolution was called up to lead a force to suppress the protest It was at this time 1794 that Morgan was promoted to Major General Serving under General Light Horse Harry Lee Morgan led one wing of the militia army into Western Pennsylvania 108 The massive show of force brought an end to the protests without a shot being fired After the uprising had been suppressed Morgan commanded the remnant of the army that remained until 1795 in Pennsylvania some 1 200 militiamen one of whom was Meriwether Lewis 109 Aftermath The insurrection collapsed as the federal army marched west into western Pennsylvania in October 1794 Some of the most prominent leaders of the insurrection such as David Bradford fled westward to safety It took six months for those who were charged to be tried Most were acquitted due to mistaken identity unreliable testimony and lack of witnesses Two were sentenced to hang see below Immediately before the arrests as many as 2 000 of the rebels had fled into the mountains beyond the reach of the militia It was a great disappointment to Hamilton who had hoped to bring rebel leaders such as David Bradford to trial in Philadelphia and possibly see them hanged for treason Instead when the militia at last turned back out of all the suspects they had seized a mere twenty were selected to serve as examples They were at worst bit players in the uprising but they were better than nothing 110 The captured participants and the Federal militia arrived in Philadelphia on Christmas Day Some artillery was fired and church bells were heard as a huge throng lined Broad Street to cheer the troops and mock the rebels Presley Neville said he could not help feeling sorry for them The captured rebels were paraded down Broad Street being humiliated bedraggled and half starved 110 Other accounts describe the indictment of 24 men for high treason 111 Most of the accused had eluded capture so only ten men stood trial for treason in federal court 111 Of these only Philip Wigle 114 and John Mitchell were convicted Wigle had beaten up a tax collector and burned his house Mitchell was a simpleton who had been convinced by David Bradford to rob the U S mail These the only two convicted of treason and sentenced to death by hanging were later pardoned by President Washington 110 115 116 117 Pennsylvania state courts were more successful in prosecuting lawbreakers securing numerous convictions for assault and rioting 118 In his seventh State of the Union Address Washington explained his decision to pardon Mitchell and Wigle Hamilton and John Jay drafted the address as they had others before Washington made the final edit The misled have abandoned their errors he stated For though I shall always think it a sacred duty to exercise with firmness and energy the constitutional powers with which I am vested yet it appears to me no less consistent with the public good than it is with my personal feelings to mingle in the operations of Government every degree of moderation and tenderness which the national justice dignity and safety may permit 119 120 While violent opposition to the whiskey tax ended political opposition to the tax continued Opponents of internal taxes rallied around the candidacy of Thomas Jefferson and helped him defeat President John Adams in the election of 1800 By 1802 Congress repealed the distilled spirits excise tax and all other internal Federal taxes Until the War of 1812 the Federal government would rely solely on import tariffs for revenue which quickly grew with the Nation s expanding foreign trade 25 Legacy The James Miller House on the Oliver Miller Homestead located in South Park Township Allegheny County Pennsylvania In 1794 the first fired gunshots of the Whiskey Rebellion occurred on the property when revenue officers served a writ on William Miller Shots were fired but the officers were not injured Later William was pardoned The Washington administration s suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion met with widespread popular approval 121 The episode demonstrated that the new national government had the willingness and ability to suppress violent resistance to its laws It was therefore viewed by the Washington administration as a success a view that has generally been endorsed by historians 122 The Washington administration and its supporters usually failed to mention however that the whiskey excise remained difficult to collect and that many westerners continued to refuse to pay the tax 36 The events contributed to the formation of political parties in the United States a process already underway 123 The whiskey tax was repealed after Thomas Jefferson s Republican Party came to power in 1801 which opposed the Federalist Party of Hamilton and Washington 124 The Rebellion raised the question of what kinds of protests were permissible under the new Constitution Legal historian Christian G Fritz argued that there was not yet a consensus about sovereignty in the United States even after ratification of the Constitution Federalists believed that the government was sovereign because it had been established by the people radical protest actions were permissible during the American Revolution but were no longer legitimate in their thinking But the Whiskey Rebels and their defenders believed that the Revolution had established the people as a collective sovereign and the people had the collective right to change or challenge the government through extra constitutional means 125 Historian Steven Boyd argued that the suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion prompted anti Federalist westerners to finally accept the Constitution and to seek change by voting for Republicans rather than resisting the government Federalists for their part came to accept the public s role in governance and no longer challenged the freedom of assembly and the right to petition 126 In popular culture Susanna RowsonSoon after the Whiskey Rebellion actress playwright Susanna Rowson wrote a stage musical about the insurrection entitled The Volunteers with music by composer Alexander Reinagle The play is now lost but the songs survive and suggest that Rowson s interpretation was pro Federalist The musical celebrates as American heroes the militiamen who put down the rebellion the volunteers of the title 127 President Washington and Martha Washington attended a performance of the play in Philadelphia in January 1795 128 W C Fields recorded a comedy track in Les Paul s studio in 1946 shortly before his death entitled The Temperance Lecture for the album W C Fields His Only Recording Plus 8 Songs by Mae West The bit discussed Washington and his role in putting down the Whiskey Rebellion and Fields wondered aloud whether George put down a little of the vile stuff too 129 L Neil Smith wrote the alternate history novel The Probability Broach in 1980 as part of his North American Confederacy Series In it Albert Gallatin joins the rebellion in 1794 to benefit the farmers rather than the fledgling US Government as he did in reality This results in the rebellion becoming a Second American Revolution This eventually leads to George Washington being overthrown and executed for treason the abrogation of the Constitution and Gallatin being proclaimed the second president and serving as president until 1812 130 131 David Liss 2008 novel The Whiskey Rebels covers many of the circumstances during 1788 92 that led to the 1794 Rebellion The fictional protagonists are cast against an array of historical persons including Alexander Hamilton William Duer Anne Bingham Hugh Henry Brackenridge Aaron Burr and Philip Freneau In 2011 the Whiskey Rebellion Festival was started in Washington Pennsylvania This annual event is held in July and includes live music food and historic reenactments featuring the tar and feathering of the tax collector 132 133 Other works which include events of the Whiskey Rebellion The Latimers A Tale of the Western Insurrection of 1794 by clergyman Henry Christopher McCook 1898 The Delectable Country by Leland Baldwin 1939 Copper Kettle Song composed by Albert Frank Beddoe and made popular by Joan Baez also recorded by Chet Atkins Bob Dylan and Gillian Welch Margery Evendern s young adult novel Wilderness Boy 1955 See also History portal Liquor portal Pennsylvania portalAmerican Whiskey Trail Fort Gaddis gathering spot in Fayette County Pennsylvania during Rebellion and site of the raising of a liberty pole Fries s Rebellion Jean Bonnet Tavern List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States Moonshine Rum Rebellion Australia 1808 Shays Rebellion Tax resistance in the United StatesNotes Slaughter 1986 pp 210 14 219 Robert W Coakley The Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Disorders 1789 1878 DIANE Publishing 1996 67 Risen Clay December 6 2013 How America Learned to Love Whiskey The Atlantic Retrieved April 24 2020 Rorabaugh W J The Alcoholic Republic An American Tradition 1979 Oxford University Press 53 Howlett Leon The Kentucky Bourbon Experience A Visual Tour of Kentucky s Bourbon Distilleries 2012 7 Carol Berkin A Sovereign People The Crises of the 1790s and the Birth of American Nationalism 2017 pp 7 80 Chernow 2004 p 297 Chernow 2004 pp 327 30 Chernow 2004 p 341 Hogeland 2006 p 27 Chernow 2004 p 342 43 Hogeland 2006 p 63 Slaughter 1986 p 100 Slaughter 1986 p 105 Hogeland 2006 p 64 ch 15 1 Stat 199 American State Papers Finance Volume 1 110 ExplorePAHistory com Stories from PA History Retrieved February 11 2017 Slaughter 1986 p 97 Hogeland 2006 p 66 Hogeland 2006 p 68 Hogeland 2006 p 67 Holt 2004 p 30 Slaughter 1986 pp 147 49 Hogeland 2006 pp 68 70 Hogeland 2006 p 68 69 Holt 2004 p 30 Slaughter 1986 p 148 Slaughter 1986 p 148 Hogeland 2006 p 69 a b c Hoover Michael The Whiskey Rebellion Regulations amp Rulings Division Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau US Department of the Treasury Retrieved February 17 2017 no date This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Slaughter 1986 p 108 Slaughter 1986 p 110 Slaughter 1986 p 206 Hogeland 2006 pp 23 25 Slaughter 1986 p 113 Hogeland 2006 p 24 Hogeland 2006 p 114 15 Slaughter 1986 p 113 Hogeland dates the attack on Johnson to September 7 the night before the Pittsburgh convention Hogeland 2006 p 24 Hogeland 2006 p 103 04 Slaughter 1986 p 114 Slaughter 1986 p 103 a b Tachau 1985 pp 97 118 Slaughter 1986 p 117 Gross David M 2014 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns Picket Line Press pp 77 78 ISBN 978 1 4905 7274 1 Slaughter 1986 p 119 Hogeland 2006 p 124 Hogeland 2006 pp 122 23 Hogeland 2006 pp 117 19 122 23 Slaughter 1986 pp 125 27 Slaughter 1986 pp 119 23 Slaughter 1986 p 151 53 Hogeland 2006 pp 97 102 Hogeland 2006 pp 119 24 Gross David M 2014 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns Picket Line Press p 72 ISBN 978 1 4905 7274 1 Hogeland 2006 pp 130 31 a b Slaughter 1986 p 151 Slaughter 1986 p 150 Slaughter 1986 p 153 Slaughter 1986 p 165 Barksdale K T amp Lee H 2003 Our Rebellious Neighbors Virginia s Border Counties during Pennsylvania s Whiskey Rebellion The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography pages 17 18 111 1 5 32 JStor link Slaughter 1986 p 177 Cooke 1963 p 328 Hogeland 2006 p 142 Slaughter 1986 p 170 Slaughter 1986 p 182 Cooke 1963 p 321 Cooke 1963 pp 321 22 Slaughter 1986 p 183 Hogeland 2006 p 124 Hogeland William July 3 2006 Why the Whiskey Rebellion Is Worth Recalling Now History News Network Archived from the original on August 10 2010 Retrieved February 11 2017 S E Morison The Oxford History of the United States 1783 1917 London Oxford University Press 1927 182 Slaughter 1986 p 177 Hogeland 2006 p 146 The number of militiamen in the first attack on Bower Hill varies in contemporary accounts Hogeland 2006 p 268 Slaughter 1986 p 179 Hogeland 2006 pp 147 48 Slaughter 1986 p 3 Tucker Spencer C June 11 2014 The Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Early American Republic 1783 1812 A Political Social and Military History 3 volumes A Political Social and Military History ABC CLIO p 52 ISBN 978 1 59884 157 2 Retrieved February 10 2017 Hogeland 2006 pp 150 51 Slaughter 1986 p 179 Hogeland 2006 p 152 Hogeland 2006 p 153 Hogeland 2006 pp 153 54 Slaughter 1986 pp 3 179 80 Slaughter 1986 p 180 Hogeland 2006 p 155 56 Slaughter 1986 pp 181 83 Slaughter 1986 pp 183 85 Slaughter 1986 p 186 Hogeland 172 Slaughter 1986 pp 186 87 Slaughter 1986 p 187 Slaughter 1986 pp 188 89 Hogeland 169 Holt 2004 p 10 Holt writes that earlier historians had misidentified the six counties represented by the flag Slaughter 1986 p 185 Slaughter 1986 pp 187 88 Hogeland 170 77 a b Whiskey Point Albert Gallatin Historical Marker Explore PA history Retrieved January 9 2017 Holt 2004 pp 54 57 Slaughter 1986 pp 188 89 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 p 480 Slaughter 1986 pp 197 99 Slaughter 1986 p 199 Holt 2004 p 11 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 p 481 Mark G Spencer Democratic Republican Societies in Peter Knight ed Conspiracy Theories in American History Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO Press 2003 1 221 Slaughter 1986 pp 192 93 196 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 p 478 Slaughter 1986 p 196 Slaughter 1986 pp 199 200 Hogeland 2006 p 199 a b Slaughter 1986 p 203 a b c d e Washington G Jackson D Twohig D 1976 The diaries of George Washington Charlottesville University Press of Virginia Retrieved June 30 2018 Hogeland 2006 p 205 06 Chernow 2004 pp 475 76 Hogeland 189 Slaughter 1986 pp 210 14 Slaughter 1986 p 208 a b Forman Jonathan Journal of Jonathan Forman 7 pgs September 21 1794 October 25 1794 Box 1 Folder 1 Jonathan Forman Papers September 21 1794 October 25 1794 DAR 1982 01 Darlington Collection Special Collections Department University of Pittsburgh PDF Retrieved August 2 2017 Slaughter 1986 pp 205 06 Hogeland 213 Ellis His Excellency George Washington 225 Manella Angela Jonathan Forman Papers Finding Aid Archive Service Center University of Pittsburgh Retrieved April 4 2013 Slaughter 1986 pp 215 16 Slaughter 1986 p 216 Higginbotham pp 189 91 Higginbotham pp 193 98 a b c Craughwell amp Phelps 2008 a b Ifft 1985 p 172 Slaughter 1986 pp 290 91 Craughwell Thomas J Phelps M William 2008 Failures of the Presidents From the Whiskey Rebellion and War of 1812 to the Bay of Pigs and War in Iraq Fair Winds Press p 22 ISBN 978 1 61673 431 2 Sources show a variety of spellings for his surname including Vigol and Wigal 112 113 Slaughter 1986 p 219 Hogeland 2006 p 238 Ifft 1985 p 176 Ifft 1985 pp 175 76 Fitzpatrick John C January 1939 The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745 1799 Volume 34 October 11 1794 March 29 1796 ISBN 9781623764449 The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745 Elkins amp McKitrick 1993 pp 481 84 Boyd 1994 p 78 Slaughter 1986 p 221 Boyd 1994 p 80 Hogeland 2006 p 242 Fritz Christian G Fritz April 27 2009 American Sovereigns the People and America s Constitutional Tradition Before the Civil War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 12560 4 Boyd 1994 pp 80 83 Vickers Anita 2009 The New Nation American Popular Culture Through History p 213 ISBN 978 0 313 31264 9 Branson Susan 2001 These Fiery Frenchified Dames Women and Political Culture in Early National Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 181 Smith Ronald L 1998 Comedy Stars at 78 RPM Biographies and Discographies of 89 American and British Recording Artists 1896 1946 McFarland p 59 ISBN 978 0 7864 0462 9 John J Pierce When world views collide a study in imagination and evolution Greenwood Press 1989 163 Peter Josef Muhlbauer Frontiers and dystopias Libertarian ideology in science fiction in Dieter Plehwe et al eds Neoliberal Hegemony A Global Critique Taylor amp Francis 2006 162 Washington Co Festival Marks Whiskey Rebellion WPXI August 1 2011 Retrieved March 23 2015 2017 Whiskey Rebellion Festival Whiskey Rebellion Festival Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved February 11 2017 BibliographyBoyd Steven R 1994 The Whiskey Rebellion Popular Rights and the Meaning of the First Amendment In Porter David ed The Whiskey Rebellion and the trans Appalachian frontier Washington Pa Washington and Jefferson College pp 73 84 OCLC 894777540 Chernow Ron 2004 Alexander Hamilton New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 009 0 OCLC 53083988 via Internet Archive Cooke Jacob E July 1963 The Whiskey Insurrection A Re Evaluation Pennsylvania History A Journal of Mid Atlantic Studies Penn State University Press 30 3 316 346 ISSN 0031 4528 JSTOR 27770195 OCLC 5542845793 Crytzer Brady J The Whiskey Rebellion A Distilled History of an American Crisis 2023 a scholarly history Elkins Stanley M McKitrick Eric L 1993 The Poplulist Impulse 3 Popular Sovereignty and the End of the Rebellion The Age of Federalism New York Oxford University Press pp 474 488 ISBN 978 0 19 506890 0 OCLC 26720733 via Internet Archive 1995 edition available at doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195093810 003 0011 Hogeland William 2006 The whiskey rebellion George Washington Alexander Hamilton and the frontier rebels who challenged America s newfound sovereignty New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 5491 5 OCLC 1036919582 via Internet Archive Holt Wythe January 6 2004 The Whiskey Rebellion of 1794 A Democratic Working Class Insurrection PDF University of Georgia Archived from the original PDF on September 25 2011 Presented on January 23 2004 at the Georgia Workshop in Early American History and Culture Archived from the original on January 1 2013 Ifft Richard A 1985 Treason in the Early Republic The Federal Courts Popular Protest and Federalism During the Whiskey Insurrection In Boyd Steven R ed The Whiskey Rebellion Past and Present Perspectives Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 24534 3 OCLC 11291120 Slaughter Thomas P 1986 The Whiskey Rebellion Frontier Epilogue to the American Revolution New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977187 5 OCLC 770873834 Partial preview at The Whiskey Rebellion at Google Books Tachau Mary K Bonsteel 1985 A New Look at the Whiskey Rebellion In Boyd Steven R ed The Whiskey Rebellion Past and Present Perspectives Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 24534 3 OCLC 11291120 Further readingBaldwin Leland D Hunter Ward Western Pennsylvania Historical Survey 1968 1939 WWhiskey Rebels The Story of a Frontier Uprising Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press doi 10 2307 j ctt5hjrsx ISBN 978 0 8229 9053 6 OCLC 878136515 Berkin Carol 2017 Part I The Whiskey Rebellion A Sovereign People The Crises of the 1790s and the Birth of American Nationalism New York Basic Books pp 7 80 ISBN 978 0 465 09493 6 OCLC 961388695 Preview of first four chapters at A Sovereign People at Google Books Bouton Terry 2007 The Pennsylvania Regulation of 1794 A Rebellion over Whiskey Taming Democracy The People the Founders and the Troubled Ending of the American Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press pp 216 243 ISBN 978 1 4356 0544 2 OCLC 252691795 Clouse Jerry Allan Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1994 The Whiskey Rebellion Southwestern Pennsylvania s Frontier People Test the American Constitution Harrisburg Pa Bureau of Historic Preservation Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission ISBN 978 0 89271 057 7 OCLC 44167624 Kohn Richard H 1972 The Washington Administration s Decision to Crush the Whiskey Rebellion The Journal of American History Oxford University Press OUP 59 3 567 584 doi 10 2307 1900658 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 1900658 OCLC 5545202179 Krom Cynthia L Krom Stephanie 2013 The Whiskey Tax of 1791 and The Consequent Insurrection A Wicked and Happy Tumult The Accounting Historians Journal The Academy of Accounting Historians 40 2 91 113 ISSN 0148 4184 JSTOR 43486736 OCLC 7786247710 McClure James P Summer 1991 Let Us Be Independent David Bradford and the Whiskey Insurrection Pittsburgh History 74 2 72 86 ISSN 1525 4755 via Western Pennsylvania History Snyder Jeffrey W Hammond Thomas C 2012 So That s What the Whiskey Rebellion Was Teaching Early U S History With GIS The History Teacher Society for History Education 45 3 447 455 ISSN 0018 2745 JSTOR 23265898 OCLC 802921302 Thompson Charles May 9 2011 Whiskey and Geography Southern Spaces Atlanta GA US Emory University doi 10 18737 m7w02c ISSN 1551 2754 OCLC 7291008180 Yoo John Fall 2010 George Washington and the Executive Power University of St Thomas Journal of Law amp Public Policy 5 1 1 35 ISSN 2154 6436 2154 6428 Contemporary sources Brackenridge Henry Marie 1859 History of the Western Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania commonly called the Whisky Insurrection 1794 Pittsburgh Printed by W S Haven OCLC 11164920 32351897 Brackenridge Hugh Henry 1795 Incidents of the Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania in the Year 1794 Philadelphia Printed and sold by John M Culloch OCLC 642781686 Also see Incidents of the Insurrection in Western Pennsylvania in the Year 1794 at the Internet Archive Findley William 1796 History of the Insurrection in the Four Western Counties of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Printed by S H Smith OCLC 65336308 1064603706 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Whiskey Rebellion United States Congress March 3 1791 The Whiskey Act Philadelphia Printed by Francis Childs and John Swaine Wikidata United States Statutes at Large Volume 1 1st Congress 3rd Session Chapter 15 pp 199 214 OCLC 210086758 via Wikisource Washington George 1979 Jackson Donald Twohig Dorothy eds The diaries of George Washington Vol 6 Charlottesville University Press of Virginia pp 178 198 ISBN 0 8139 0807 8 OCLC 644873705 via Internet Archive Whiskey Rebellion documents Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Retrieved September 6 2022 primary sources Washington s papers from the Avalon Project George Washington The Papers of George Washington textual records The Avalon Project Yale CT Lillian Goldman Law Library Yale Law School OCLC 37342540 Proclamation of September 15 1792 Retrieved September 6 2022 warning against obstruction of the excise law Proclamation of Proclamation of August 7 1794 Retrieved September 6 2022 announcing the preliminary raising of militia and commanding the insurgents in western Pennsylvania to disperse Proclamation of September 25 1794 Retrieved September 6 2022 announcing the commencement of military operations Sixth Annual Message November 19 1794 Retrieved September 6 2022 Washington dedicated most of this annual message to the Whiskey Rebellion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whiskey Rebellion amp oldid 1171595220, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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